ISSUE MOTIF: Statuette of Nite
Owl; more generally, there is a theme of reminisces of the past.COVER CLOCK: 4 min. to midnight

Page 1, panel 1: Hollis' apartment. Recognizable here are a can of
Miller lite, the Nite Owl statuette, the Minutemen photo, and the "Hero
Retires" front page. In panel 5 we see it's from the New York News.

Panel 2: Sally's retirement home. Note the Nostalgia bottle.

Panel 3: Today is the 26th, assuming that "last night" actually means
"early this morning." The calendar in panel 8 has it as the 27th,
though. (The fire would have made the news the same day, most likely.)

Panels 3-4: It's interesting to compare Hollis and Sally's viewing
material; Hollis is watching the news, Sally is watching a soap.
It's probably the six o'clock news Hollis is watching (using the same
Afghanistan graphic as last night), making it about 3:00 in
California and accounting for the differences in lighting.

Panel 6: Recognizable here are the "Silk Spectre" Tijuana Bible, the
group photo of the Minutemen, and a magazine with a "Nostalgia" ad.

Page 2, panel 3: At the bottom of the panel is the Dr. Manhattan
issue of Nova Express.
Surprisingly, the "MultiVite" does not appear to be
a Veidt product.

Panels 2, 6: The statuette is visible in the background. Mirror
image (Hollis' face) in 6.

Page 3, panel 1: Lovers graffiti on the wall. This spread confirms
the assumed layout of the corner.

Panel 2: The Pyramid Deliveries truck again. "Spirit of '77" refers
back to the era of the Keene act. (The phrase refers to "Spirit of '76,"
used to refer to the bicentennial of the Declaration of Independence,
signed in 1776.)

Panel 3:
The Utopia is now showing The Day The Earth Stood Still.

Panel 4: Bernard confirms the date as the 27th. There's a day
missing here somewhere:
issue #6 has the date of Mal's first
session as the 25th, which
would make the news broadcast Dan and Laurie watch in
issue #7 the same day. The
action of issue #7 only covers
mid-afternoon on one day to early morning
the next, so the tenement rescue would have been the 26th. The only
plausible explanation is that the media waited an extra day to report the fire,
or that Hollis waited a while to call Sally. (We can assume that page 3
is the day after pages 1-2, but that doesn't account for Sally's
calendar.

Panel 7: The radiation sign is visible in the background, as is a
Nova Express and New Frontiersman.
This panel is an echo of issue #6, 16:5.

Panel 5: The Nova Express cover has pictures of Dr. Manhattan,
Rorschach, and Ozymandias, and the headline reads, "Superheroes in
the News: Spirit of '77." The Gazette headlines read, "Tanks Mass In
Eastern Europe: "Purely Defensive" Say Reds," and "California: Governor
Reagan Urges Hard Line." (In the real world Reagan was President in '85,
though he was California governor in the '70s.)

Panel 6: Dan must be worried about something; he has no specific need
to fix the locks, since Rorschach hasn't broken them for a couple of
weeks. (Unless Gordian is just so overworked by Rorschach's breaking and
entering spree that it took them that long to get out there.)

Panel 8: In reference to the "Sweet Chariot" cubes found in
Rorschach's pocket.

Page 9, panel 1: Fine has spotted Laurie's ball-pipe.

Page 10:
This is Hector Godfrey, editor of the New Frontiersman, in
the Frontiersman offices. The issue being pasted up is the backup for
this issue. Notice the style of the clock in the background.

Panel 5: This is the same picture on the earlier cover, and seen on
the news in the last issue.

Page 11: The speakers are Max Shea (alive and well) and Hira Manish.
Hira is left-handed. Comparing it to the people in the background, the
thing under the tarpaulin must be enormous.

Panel 4: Max is referring, of course, to "Marooned."

Page 12, panel 4: Is Nova Express funded by Pyramid Deliveries?
Things are beginning to tie together in minor ways.

Panel 6: The juice over the eyes calls to mind the blood-spattered
smiley-face button.

Page 13, panel 2:
This is Derf, who we saw in issue #1. "Katies"
refers to KT-28.

Panel 3: Joey again. Aline is her ex-girlfriend.

Page 15, panel 4: The splash of blood brings to mind the blood on his
coat from the kidnapper's dog in issue #6.
Interestingly, though, this seems to
mark the beginning of a transition back to humanity for him: notice his
attempts at friendliness and politeness in later issues.

Page 18, panels 4 and 6: His tracking the blood refers back to the
first issue, page 1.

Page 21, panel 1: Notice that Rorschach, for all his personality
flaws, is at least polite.

Page 25, panel 2: The shape of the can on the lower right is
interesting; it looks Japanese, or at any rate not American. The "Black
Freighter" page has a half-page ad
(which had mostly phased out of our comics by that
time). One of the comics advertised is "X-Ships."

Page 27, panels 5, 7, 9: I am not sure if these are genuine
flashbacks or just symbolic.
Hollis could not have had the same dog with him when
he was active as a hero (it would be at least 23), and he was never pictured
with a masked dog anywhere else.

Incidentally, the man in the skull mask is Screaming Skull, and the
Nazi with the monocle is Captain Axis. He may be based on Captain Nazi,
an enemy of Fawcett Comic's Marvel Family. Moloch is visible in panels
5, 7 and 9.

Page 28, panel 1: The hair across the eye leads back to the
smiley-face.

Pages 29-32: The 10/31/85 edition of the New Frontiersman.

Page 1: Surely the "Issue IVII" is wrong. "IV" is 4, and "II" is 2;
even if this were the correct nomenclature, this isn't the sixth issue by
any means (it's been published since at least the fifties). (In our
world it would say "volume," not "issue.") If it's meant as "42," which is
more plausible (since Hector's father founded it), it should be "XLII."
Maybe Hector just doesn't know much about Roman numerals.

Page 3: This cartoon, signed "F," is by Feinberg, who may be the same
Walt Feinberg who drew "Tales of the Black Freighter."

Page 4: Surprisingly, Godfrey is actually onto something here. This
is important information. (There is evidence later that Deschaines
actually was psychic, making him the only super-powered character in the
series besides Dr. Manhattan.)